After weighing all of his options, however, Townsend had to tell Meyer and Saban, no thanks. He chose to stay close to home and signed with the Florida Gators Thursday.

“I was in complete shock,” Townsend said of what transpired on Monday. “I was sitting down with family, saying some prayers and wondering out loud if all of this was happening for a reason. Like, what if this was just something that was meant to be. So I just started to weigh my options and trying to figure out where my heart was.”

In the end, his heart was at the University of Florida, where his brother, Clay, is a sophomore. It’s the same place where both his father, Clay Sr., and mother, Susan, attended college.

“Susan and I were Gators but we didn't push him in any direction,” Clay Townsend Sr. said of his son. “If he wanted to be a Buckeye, then we were in full support of him going to Ohio State. This was an extremely difficult decision for a young man to make.”

So difficult that on Wednesday during National Signing Day, Johnny was not ready to make his decision at the same time friend and teammate A.J. Turman signed with Georgia. He rescheduled for noon Wednesday. That never happened, either.

“I even thought I had made up my mind, but then in the car on the ride over I just broke down,” Johnny Townsend said.

He still went on to the school, where he found an Alabama hat waiting for him. Word was out that he might be flipping to Alabama instead of Ohio State. An anonymous person claiming to be Johnny’s mother dropped off the Crimson Tide lid at the Boone front office.

“We have no idea where it came from,” said Johnny Townsend, who told the crowd gathered at the high school be patient with him while he pondered a decision. “I still had no idea what I wanted to do and it wasn’t until night time that I had finally come to a decision on it

He decided his heart was in Gainesville, which is where he will also take his 43.6-yards-per-kick right leg.

Once he decided, the hard part wasn’t quite finished. He had a pair of phone calls to make that he wasn’t exactly looking forward to. The first one was to Meyer.

“It went really bad . . . sad and it was tough to tell him I wouldn’t be coming up there,” Johnny said. “He wanted to know why I was making that choice, and I just told him I had a change of heart and had to do what was best for me and my family. It was tough calling Coach Meyer. He has been so great all along the whole process.”

Then he had to call Saban. Not many people can say they turned down scholarships from Urban Meyer and Nick Saban on the same day. Johnny Townsend, the Eagle Scout, the Army All-American, the Doc Blanchard Award winner, and, yes, the Boone High homecoming king, is a special person.

“It has been absolutely unreal,” Townsend said. “I never would have thought my phone would be ringing with Coach Saban and Coach Muschamp both offering me scholarships. It’s just absolutely incredible.”

It doesn’t even bother him that the Gators already have a starting punter in Ray Guy Award finalist Kyle Christy.

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